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I just successfully changed my laptop OS from crunchbang/debian to arch and i like it a lot so far. I used to have cron run a shellscript which ran grive and stuffed output to a log file, however i was never quite comfortable with not getting notified if it stopped working. I've read up on grive and google-drive-ocamlfuse (which seems to require a shitload of AUR dependencies).
What solution do people actually use to sync google drive files? Reliability is the highest priority
Also what is a good AUR helper for installing somehing like google-drive-ocamlfuse (which has branching dependencies, some i AUR and some in offical repos)
Thanks in advance
Last edited by raptorjesus (2014-12-27 21:18:14)
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grive is the only thing I have found that works. As Google has decided to ignore Linux, I do my best to ignore Google; my preferred solution is none.
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none, cower
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Also "none + cower". But cower is probably not at all fit for the need you just described. But I'd suggest you avoid that need. There is one aur helper I know of that would automate installation of a long chain of aur dependencies ... but I wouldn't wish that aur helper on my worst enemy.
I've also struggled to get any google stuff synced and/or working under linux to absolutely no avail. Grive seems decent for what it does, but all the gcalcli packages have failed miserably and repeatedly for me - I can't even login. I'd love to find a good calendar I could use on my phone and sync to my laptop (format is irrelevant, I could hack on just about anything if I can just get the data) - but all the android apps I can find are just different front-ends the google calendar. Though this thread itself just prompted me to dig a bit deeper for an actual alternative calendar for my phone as getting gcal on my computer is impossible outside of a web browser. So long story short - I'd love to see what recommendations can be made here.
"UNIX is simple and coherent..." - Dennis Ritchie, "GNU's Not UNIX" - Richard Stallman
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I used insync when it was free, it seemed decent. But now you have to pay 15$ per each google account.
Last edited by ugjka (2014-12-28 08:08:10)
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If OP isn't too reliant on the Google ecosystem maybe something akin to Spideroak might be worth looking at, it's multi platform and works very well under Linux.
Last edited by cirrus (2014-12-28 20:07:27)
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Hi, OP here, thanks for all the replies. It seems I should get going with spideroak. At least from research a while ago they seemed like one of the more privacy-conscious storage providers.
Anyway I will post my setup to run grive regularly (every 5 minutes), maybe it will help another newbie, and since I am one myself I'd be happy if someone tells me whether I'm using systemd timers all wrong.
~/.config/systemd/user/grive.timer
[Unit]
Description=Grive timer
[Timer]
OnCalendar=*:0/5
Unit=grive.service
[Install]
WantedBy=timers.target
~/.config/systemd/user/grive.service
[Unit]
Description=Grive service
[Service]
ExecStart=grive.sh (shell script that calls grive in the right directory + saves log output)
[Install]
WantedBy=default.target
systemctl --user start grive.timer
systemctl --user enable grive.timer
Last edited by raptorjesus (2014-12-28 23:57:30)
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As @ugjka I am using Insync. It is supported well on Arch Linux and syncs my entire Google Drive files into a folder in /home. Similar what Dropbox does.
Yes it costs money but since I only have one Google Drive account it was worth the $15.
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